From days of long ago,
From uncharted regions of the minor leagues,
Comes a legend,
The legend of Joey Gallo, Defender of the Donkey-Verse.
A mighty "slugger"
Loved by TexAgs
Feared by basically no one
As Gallo's legend grew, peace settled across the Major Leagues
From Arlington to the Bronx to Los Angeles to the Twin Cities, fans purchased tickets by the dozen to watch the one known as King Donkey pursue history.
But in his quest to achieve baseball greatness, a new, horrible menace arose. Jealous managers kept him on the bench. Petty pitchers threw balls he could actually hit on the ground, causing him to get injured while doing unnatural tasks like "running", and half-assed general managers sought to platoon him with "future stars."
The light began to fade and we feared that Gallo's days pursuing excellence were coming to an end.
In our most desperate hour, our nation's capital responded, sending out the call.
King Donkey was needed once more.
This is the story. Of the super force of National League cellar dwellers. So desperate for a first baseman and anything resembling a power hitter that they were sent by the Nationals to bring back:
GALLO, DEFENDER OF THE DONKEY-VERSE
My friends, I humbly submit to you the 4th annual installment of the Joey Gallo Watch aka "Finding Mark Reynolds" aka "The quest for 223: Saluting the Greatest Whiffers in the Game today."
What started as a way to celebrate Joey Gallo's near miss at the single-season strikeout record in 2021 has evolved into the most important thread in TexAgs history, according to Billy Liucci*
It is a joyous place where fans of Joey Gallo and the rest of those lovable idiots who tally more strikeouts than hits in a single season can come together and appreciate the fine art of going to the plate without a single clue what's going to happen and swiftly returning to the dugout after several wild flails at the ball.
2023 was a gorgeous year for the strikeout, with three guys breaking 200, including Kyle Schwarber at 215, Eugenio Suarez at 214, and his teammate Teoscar Hernandez at 211. Julio Rodriguez added 175 for the Mariners, giving them an exact total of 600 the first time in MLB history that 3 guys on one team have combined for 600.
Meanwhile, trapped in the Twin Cities, Joseph Tiberius Gallo slumped to 45th in the strikeout race with 142, but he missed 54 games injured, hung over and/or combing his beard. That's a pace for 213 in a season, which would tie his all-time high.
As mentioned in the opening, the Washington Nationals took a flying "whatever" on Gallo, signing him to a 1-year, $8 million contract to play first base and bat 3rd, 4th, or 5th for them. This is such exciting news, because they suck, and that means he can play every damn day and nobody will care.
Let's take a look at how Joey is doing on those all-time leaderboards.
Career strikeouts: 1,190, tied for 223rd with Will Clark and Brady Anderson. He needs just 40 whiffs to get into the Top 200. If he stays healthy and strikes out 200 times this year, he'll be into the top 125 all time.
Active strikeouts: He's #20 right now. He's also the only guy in the top 35 still in his 20s. He's just 16 behind Elvis Andrus for 19th. He's going to ride the crazy train all year if the Injury Gods allow.
How's Joey doing in spring training you might ask?
Uh, does the word DOMINANT mean anything to you?
As of 3/17/24 he was 3 for 27 with 0 home runs, 2 RBI, and 14 strikeouts. Can you say mid-season form? Pro-rate those numbers over 162 games, and we're talking 48 hits, 32 RBI, and 227 strikeouts.
Yeah, LOCKED IN is the phrase you're searching for right now.
So what's left to discuss? The Nationals open their season on Thursday, March 28 at 3:10 p.m. CDT at Cincinnati.
Joey Gallo's home opener with the Nationals, in a script so good it seems like it's from Hollywood, is on April Fool's Day.
The Nationals have a lot to live up to after going 71-91 last year. How will Joey mesh with young stars like ….. what' his name, and the other guy? We'll just have to wait and see. For the time being though, I leave you with some thoughts from the Counting Crows.
.
After a long December, there's reason to believe
Maybe this season will be better for Joey than the last.
And if you think he might break Mark Reynolds' record?
I think he should.
A closing note about Joey's dominance, courtesy of my friends on the Astros' thread.
NOTE: This thread is not for personal attacks against anyone, disparaging posts about the nature of this thread, or anyone who wants to accuse myself or anyone else of being a loser, having too much time on my hands, or anything else. Staff is asked to remove any hate speech or other derogatory comments concerning posters. This thread is for fun and satire.
* Billy Liucci did not actually say this.
From uncharted regions of the minor leagues,
Comes a legend,
The legend of Joey Gallo, Defender of the Donkey-Verse.
A mighty "slugger"
Loved by TexAgs
Feared by basically no one
As Gallo's legend grew, peace settled across the Major Leagues
From Arlington to the Bronx to Los Angeles to the Twin Cities, fans purchased tickets by the dozen to watch the one known as King Donkey pursue history.
But in his quest to achieve baseball greatness, a new, horrible menace arose. Jealous managers kept him on the bench. Petty pitchers threw balls he could actually hit on the ground, causing him to get injured while doing unnatural tasks like "running", and half-assed general managers sought to platoon him with "future stars."
The light began to fade and we feared that Gallo's days pursuing excellence were coming to an end.
In our most desperate hour, our nation's capital responded, sending out the call.
King Donkey was needed once more.
This is the story. Of the super force of National League cellar dwellers. So desperate for a first baseman and anything resembling a power hitter that they were sent by the Nationals to bring back:
GALLO, DEFENDER OF THE DONKEY-VERSE
My friends, I humbly submit to you the 4th annual installment of the Joey Gallo Watch aka "Finding Mark Reynolds" aka "The quest for 223: Saluting the Greatest Whiffers in the Game today."
What started as a way to celebrate Joey Gallo's near miss at the single-season strikeout record in 2021 has evolved into the most important thread in TexAgs history, according to Billy Liucci*
It is a joyous place where fans of Joey Gallo and the rest of those lovable idiots who tally more strikeouts than hits in a single season can come together and appreciate the fine art of going to the plate without a single clue what's going to happen and swiftly returning to the dugout after several wild flails at the ball.
2023 was a gorgeous year for the strikeout, with three guys breaking 200, including Kyle Schwarber at 215, Eugenio Suarez at 214, and his teammate Teoscar Hernandez at 211. Julio Rodriguez added 175 for the Mariners, giving them an exact total of 600 the first time in MLB history that 3 guys on one team have combined for 600.
Meanwhile, trapped in the Twin Cities, Joseph Tiberius Gallo slumped to 45th in the strikeout race with 142, but he missed 54 games injured, hung over and/or combing his beard. That's a pace for 213 in a season, which would tie his all-time high.
As mentioned in the opening, the Washington Nationals took a flying "whatever" on Gallo, signing him to a 1-year, $8 million contract to play first base and bat 3rd, 4th, or 5th for them. This is such exciting news, because they suck, and that means he can play every damn day and nobody will care.
Let's take a look at how Joey is doing on those all-time leaderboards.
Career strikeouts: 1,190, tied for 223rd with Will Clark and Brady Anderson. He needs just 40 whiffs to get into the Top 200. If he stays healthy and strikes out 200 times this year, he'll be into the top 125 all time.
Active strikeouts: He's #20 right now. He's also the only guy in the top 35 still in his 20s. He's just 16 behind Elvis Andrus for 19th. He's going to ride the crazy train all year if the Injury Gods allow.
How's Joey doing in spring training you might ask?
Uh, does the word DOMINANT mean anything to you?
As of 3/17/24 he was 3 for 27 with 0 home runs, 2 RBI, and 14 strikeouts. Can you say mid-season form? Pro-rate those numbers over 162 games, and we're talking 48 hits, 32 RBI, and 227 strikeouts.
Yeah, LOCKED IN is the phrase you're searching for right now.
So what's left to discuss? The Nationals open their season on Thursday, March 28 at 3:10 p.m. CDT at Cincinnati.
Joey Gallo's home opener with the Nationals, in a script so good it seems like it's from Hollywood, is on April Fool's Day.
The Nationals have a lot to live up to after going 71-91 last year. How will Joey mesh with young stars like ….. what' his name, and the other guy? We'll just have to wait and see. For the time being though, I leave you with some thoughts from the Counting Crows.
.
After a long December, there's reason to believe
Maybe this season will be better for Joey than the last.
And if you think he might break Mark Reynolds' record?
I think he should.
A closing note about Joey's dominance, courtesy of my friends on the Astros' thread.
the all-time Home Run leader for each MLB franchise, but only players with a career batting average under .200 pic.twitter.com/5xONOjOVMc
— BrooksGate (@Brooks_Gate) March 18, 2024
NOTE: This thread is not for personal attacks against anyone, disparaging posts about the nature of this thread, or anyone who wants to accuse myself or anyone else of being a loser, having too much time on my hands, or anything else. Staff is asked to remove any hate speech or other derogatory comments concerning posters. This thread is for fun and satire.
* Billy Liucci did not actually say this.